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When you were small, haven’t you ever dreamt of becoming the commander of a space mission? Of exploring outer space and seing the Earth from above? Well, you might not have made it into an actual space shuttle, but maybe you still carry this

After our 3.2 Release showed the ease of bringing Storybook component development to Vue, Carlos Vega was inspired to repeat the trick for Angular. Angular was a bigger job than expected, but Carlos pulled it off with help from Igor Davydkin and Ruslan Alzinov:

Learn React Js and Redux – Build 4 Projects is the best course for those students who know JavaScript, HTML and CSS. If they are interested in improving new web development framework skills, they can look at this course. This will help you to become professional and highly demanded web developer in the field of React Js and Redux and you can get highly paid jobs as a web developer. (

Here you can learn how to develop entire react js and redux application from beginning, make applications that deal with APIs and web requests, and create web applications with full authentication and real time databases. This course help you in making your choice react js and redux applications and building 4 projects as well.

CSS Grid1 is the new layout standard for the web, but we still are just getting started with new layout ideas. Many assume that CSS Grid is just a replacement for table layouts, but that’s simply not true. Others might think that we can use CSS Grid to replicate more advanced print layouts, which brings us closer to what’s possible.

One of the main reasons behind the idea of the CSS Grid Challenge2 was to have some starting points for layouts, and show what can be achieved with CSS Grids today. Well, we received some many great submissions that it was really hard to choose

Compared to the Full Stack Designer, we seem to be more familiar with the Full Stack Developers. So what is full stack designer exactly? Can we simply think he/she is a versatile designer?

In the past, designers and developers have a clear role assignment. They rarely do the both at the same time. While with the changes in product design and the evolution of team collaboration, many web designers are able to manage web developing and UX design at present.

So there comes a question: what’s the character of the so-called full stack designer? He/She is only a designer? Also coding while being a designer? Or he/she is a designer as well as a web developer?

It can be quite useful to get a "full page" screenshot in a browser. That is, not just the visible area. The visible area is pretty easy to get just by screenshotting the screen. A full page screenshot captures the entire web site even if it needs to be scrolled around to see all of it. You could take individual screenshots of the visible area and use a photo editing program to stitch them together, but that's a pain in the but. Nevermind the fact that it's extra tricky with things like fixed position elements.

Viewport units have been around for several years now, with near-perfect support in the major browsers, but I keep finding new and exciting ways to use them. I thought it would be fun to review the basics, and then round-up some of my favorite use-cases.

What are viewport units?

Four new "viewport-relative" units appeared in the CSS specifications between 2011 and 2015, as part of the W3C's CSS Values and Units Module Level 3. The new units – vw, vh, vmin, and vmax - work similarly to existing length units like px or em, but represent a percentage of the current browser viewport.

Angular, React, Vue, Bootstrap, Handlebars, jQuery are included. Plus all packages from cdnjs.com and all of NPM (via unpkg.com). Most front-end libraries should work out of the box - just use import/require(). If a popular library does not load, tell us and we’ll try to solve it with some library-specific config.

Write modern javascript (or typescript)
... read the whole story at getlibs.com.

I bet you’ve seen it. A video background that takes up the entire browser window. There is text on top of it (hence, “background”), which is an interesting effect that you don’t see every day. The biggest reason you don’t, probably, is that you can’t set a movie file as the background-image in CSS. You’ll have to do some layout trickery to get it done.

Certainly, full page background video can be just A BIT MUCH. I’d argue it can be done tastefully. I’m not particularly interested in a design philosophy debate here (perhaps another time), but instead the how-to of getting it done if you need to, as well as some different patterns it might take the form of.

Web development encompasses multiple skill sets, and there are different kinds of careers within the web development space. Three terms often used are “front end,” “back end,” and “full stack.”

In this post we’ll talk about all three and what the their key differences are.

Terms

“Front End” typically refers to the stuff that you actually see on the website in the browser (and is often called “client-side”). This covers how the content is presented including all the little user interface elements like menus and dropdowns and transitions and modals.

Let's say you're making a blog post layout. Content is entered into a CMS inside a WYSIWYG editor field. You echo that content to the page. You pull it up on a mobile device and notice the paragraphs go edge-to-edge. Yikes, it's a little uncomfortable. So you add some kind of left/right padding maybe using a div.container.

This works great until the client asks for the images and video to go full bleed. Your universal padding solution no longer works well.

You got options. Containerizing isn't great in any scenario. So how do you yank out those full bleed elements? Dave does it with what I'd call a reverso-whitelist. Say you want images and videos to be full bleed, but everything else needs edge padding:

Our mission at Tutorialzine is to keep you up to date with the latest and coolest trends in web development. That’s why every month we release a handpicked collection of some of the best resources that we’ve stumbled upon and deemed worthy of your attention.

Propeller is a CSS components framework based on Bootstrap and Google’s Material Design language. It includes 25 components made with responsiveness in mind and featuring the typical Material Design animations. The project can be downloaded as a theme for Bootstrap, a full framework, or as stand alone components.